|
Chris Armstrong, President of Armstrong Process Group, Inc., is an internationally
recognized thought leader and expert in iterative software
development, object-oriented analysis and design, architecture,
the Unified Modeling Language, use case driven requirements,
and process improvement.
Over the past twenty years, Chris has worked to
bring modern software engineering best practices to practical
application at many different private companies and government
organizations all over the world. He has worked in many different
industries including financial services, manufacturing, retail,
healthcare, education, publishing, real estate, medical,
and social services.
Chris has spoken at over 30 conferences over the last seven
years including OMG workshops, The Open Group IT Architecture
Practitioner Conference, Software Development Expo, Rational
User Conference, and UML World. Chris has written a number
of articles for various publications including Cutter IT
Journal, Enterprise Development, and Rational Developer Network.
Chris is the technical representative for APG at the Object
Management Group (OMG) and contributes to the UML 2.0 specification
and the Software Process Engineering Metamodel (SPEM) 2.0
specification. Chris is also the APG representative to The
Open Group Architecture Forum and co-chairs the TOGAF/MDA
process modeling effort. Chris also represents APG at the
Eclipse Process Framework (EPF) project. |
|
|
|
Presentations
TUTORIAL: Business Modeling in TOGAF™
In this tutorial, the speaker will describe how to execute Phase B: Business Architecture of TOGAF. Topics of discussion will include:
- 1) the appropriate level of detail for the Baseline and Target Business Architecture,
- 2) relevant industry standards and reference models for business modeling,
- 3) how to identify business architecture building blocks, and
- 4) and how to perform gap analysis and produce the Business Architecture Report
Model-Driven SOA
Service-Oriented Architecture (SOA) is the latest rage promising increased agility in meeting changing business needs and offering higher levels of interoperability. While the many SOA standards and technologies can and have provided these benefits, it is not always clear how an organization goes about describing a SOA and how that description relates to other business and systems models they already have (or need to develop). In this presentation, the speaker will describe one of the submissions to the Object Management Group (OMG) for the UML Profile and Metamodel for Services (UPMS) specification, how it can be used to describe a SOA, and be integrated into the typical business and system models that organizations have traditionally created.
return
to program
|
|
|